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Service EARLY DINNERS Mon? aN - Sunray 4:3o p.m to 6:0o p.m 116 4108 West Maple • Bloomfield Hills • 111101 626-2630 2 DOORS DOWN IN THE PARK PLACE PLAZA 22120 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE • 398 - 5502 or 398 5503 Oak Park Dine In and Carry-Out - GOLDEN BOWL Szechuan • Mandarin • Cantonese OPEN 7 DAYS: Mon.-Thurs. 11-9:30, Fri. & Sat. 11-10:30, Sun. & Holidays 1-9:30 • Banquet Facilities • Your Chef: FRANK ENG B'nai B'rith Scare: Old Memories JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT The terrorism scare at the 16th Street headquarters of B'nai B'rith was an especially potent experi- ence for the group's executive vice president, Sidney Clearfield. Twenty years ago, Mr. Clearfield, then assistant director of the B'nai B'rith Youth Organi- zation, was one of 100 hostages held for 39 hours by a group of Hanafi Muslims who invaded B'nai B'rith and two other sites in downtown Washington, killing one person in the process. Mr. Clearfield spent much of the or- deal tied up in the eighth-floor con- ference room. Recently, Mr. Clearfield par- ticipated in an impromptu Passover dinner in the same room as more than 100 employees of the Jewish service organization and other groups with offices in the building were quarantined while federal officials and scientists at the Naval Medical Research In- stitute tried to identify the gooey red substance in a petri dish, de- livered to B'nai B'rith the day be- fore along with a threatening letter. Mr. Clearfield said that his new responsibilities and his earlier ex- perience with terrorism produced a different reaction this time around. '1 became very calm when it be- gan," he said in an interview. "I knew I had to take whatever steps were necessary to keep the staff calm. Actually, that wasn't too dif- ficult; over the years, we've had periodic threats, and I usually have to make the decision whether to deal with the police and the FBI or to disregard it. So I knew what had to be done." Mr. Clearfield said he didn't have flashbacks to the Hanafi siege in March 1977. "The only moment when it came back to me was at the very end, when we were gathered in the conference room," he said. "One of the police sa id that the last time he was in that room was with the hostages; then I thought about it and remembered." Mr. Clearfield and other B'nai B'rith officials expressed concern about some aspects of the han- dling of the emergency by local au- thorities. "Several of the police and fire officials indicated to us that they were not really trained and pre- pared to deal with this kind of bi- ological or chemical threat," he said. "And we were concerned that there weren't proper facilities for decontamination; the people who went through the decontamina- OLD MEMORIES page 124 ( -